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© 2012 The University of Chicago,
5801 South Ellis Ave. Chicago, IL 60637
773.702.1234
Catalog Home › The College › Programs of Study › Social Sciences
General Education Sequences | Collegiate Courses
The distinguished American sociologist, David Riesman, who played a major role in the creation of the general education program in the social sciences at Chicago, once observed that it was only with a "marvelous hubris" that students were encouraged to range over such "large territory" in the social sciences. Indeed, since the 1940s, yearlong sequences designed to introduce students to different types of social scientific data and different forms of social sciences inquiry have become a permanent feature of the Chicago curriculum. Although considerable variety manifests itself in the way the social sciences courses in general education are organized, most of the sequences are informed, as Robert Redfield once suggested, by an attempt "to communicate the historical development of contemporary society" and by an effort "to convey some understanding of the scientific spirit as applied to social problems and the capacity to address oneself in that spirit to such a problem." By training students in the analysis of social phenomena through the development and use of interdisciplinary and comparative concepts, the courses also try to determine the characteristics common among many societies, thus enabling the individual to use both reason and special knowledge to confront rapid social change in the global world of the late twentieth century.
The Social Sciences Collegiate Division offers several social science and civilization sequences in the general education program. It also offers specialized courses that provide a particularly interdisciplinary or comparative theoretical perspective and may be of interest to students in a variety of majors. The latter set of courses should also be considered as attractive possibilities for electives.
SOSC 11100-11200-11300. Power, Identity, and Resistance I-II-III.
Students registered in this sequence must attend the first and second class sessions or their registration will be dropped.
SOSC 11100. Power, Identity, and Resistance I. 100 Units.
This course focuses on the work of three central figures in modern political economy and social theory: Adam Smith, Karl Marx and Emile Durkheim. The aim of the quarter is to introduce students to the very idea of theorizing about society, economy and politics through close readings of central works of each author. The focus is on the organization of economic process and the the ways in which it relates to social and political relations and institutions. Central questions are: How historically distinctive is the modern form of capitalist economy? Do human beings "naturally" act in certain ways in the economy and society? How much can individual self-control be relied on? What is the role of power in economic life?
Instructor(s): G. Herrigel, Staff Terms Offered: Autumn
Prerequisite(s): These courses must be taken in sequence
SOSC 11200. Power, Identity, and Resistance II. 100 Units.
The focus of this quarter is modern liberalism and its critics. The course investigates the distinctly modern liberal claim that society (or groups of associated individuals) make states for their own protection and the governance of their affairs. Authors are interrogated on questions concerning individuality, liberty, equality, the limitation of state power the importance of stability, the value of democratic participation in governance and the role that organized society plays in political life, among other issues. Both defenders and critics of the liberal conception of liberty and the state are addressed. Texts include: Machiavelli, Hobbes, Locke, Rousseau, de Tocqueville, Marx and Mill.
Instructor(s): G. Herrigel, Staff Terms Offered: Winter
Prerequisite(s): These courses must be taken in sequence. SOSC 11100.
SOSC 11300. Power, Identity, and Resistance III. 100 Units.
Spring Quarter analyzes the way in which selected themes from the first two quarters work themselves out in the history of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. Broadly, we consider the role and place of violence in liberal thought and practice. Problems of individual psychological violence as well as social and political violence are considered. Readings include texts by Kant, Nietzsche, Freud, Sorel, Dewey, Fanon, Arendt, Martin Luther King and Foucault.
Instructor(s): G. Herrigel, Staff Terms Offered: Spring
Prerequisite(s): These courses must be taken in sequence. SOSC 11200.
SOSC 12100-12200-12300. Self, Culture, and Society I-II-III.
Students registered in this sequence must attend the first and second class sessions or their registration will be dropped.
SOSC 12100. Self, Culture, and Society I. 100 Units.
The classic social theories of Smith, Marx, and Weber, along with contemporary ethnographic and historical works, serve as points of departure for considering the characterizing features of the modern world, with particular emphasis on its social-economic structure and issues of work, the texture of time, and economic globalization.
Instructor(s): B. Cohler, M. Postone, Staff Terms Offered: Autumn
Prerequisite(s): These courses must be taken in sequence
SOSC 12200. Self, Culture, and Society II. 100 Units.
In this quarter, we focus on the relation of culture, social life, and history. On the basis of readings from Durkheim, Lévi-Strauss, Sahlins, Foucault, Benjamin, Adorno, and other anthropologists and cultural theorists, we investigate how systems of meaning expressed through metaphors, symbols, rituals, and narratives constitute and articulate individual and social experience across a range of societies, including our own, and how those systems of meaning change historically.
Instructor(s): W. Mazzarella, B. Cohler, M. Postone, Staff Terms Offered: Winter
Prerequisite(s): These courses must be taken in sequence. SOSC 12100.
SOSC 12300. Self, Culture, and Society III. 100 Units.
In this quarter, we concern ourselves with the question of how personhood is constructed socially, culturally, and historically. Our considerations include issues of gender, sexuality, and ethnic identity, through the study of the wide range of approaches found in the works of Freud, Mauss, Mead, Marcuse, Vygotsky, de Beauvoir, Fanon, and others.
Instructor(s): B. Cohler, M. Postone, Staff Terms Offered: Spring
Prerequisite(s): These courses must be taken in sequence. SOSC 12200.
SOSC 13100-13200-13300. Social Science Inquiry I-II-III.
Contemporary culture is awash in scientific claims about the human condition. As evident in best-sellers like Freakonomics, Moneyball, and The Tipping Point, a data-driven conception of social life is occurring not just in the higher echelons of business or government, but in popular discourse as well. This course provides an introduction to this "positivist" approach. The Autumn Quarter starts by introducing students to the various ways that social scientists think about the world. Examples include theoretical models from Milton Friedman, Thomas Schelling, and John Nash; path-breaking experiments from Stanley Milgram and Daniel Khaneman; and quantitative research on topics ranging from voting to gun violence to baby names. Through these works, students will learn how researchers theorize about social phenomena. In the Winter Quarter, students will be introduced to social science research tools. They will learn how to collect data, conduct experiments, and make causal inferences from statistics. Using the General Social Survey, the National Election Studies, and other surveys, students will gain hands-on experience working with large data sets. In the Spring Quarter, students will conduct their own substantial research project. Students will learn how to translate their ideas into research questions, their theories into testable hypotheses, and their findings into meaningful conclusions. By year's end, students will develop a critical perspective on many perennial social questions and, ultimately, acquire "quantitative literacy," essential skills in an increasingly data-driven world.
SOSC 13100. Social Science Inquiry I. 100 Units.
Instructor(s): E. Oliver, Staff Terms Offered: Autumn
Prerequisite(s): These courses must be taken in sequence. Students registered in this sequence must attend the first and second class sessions or their registration will be dropped.
SOSC 13200. Social Science Inquiry II. 100 Units.
Instructor(s): E. Oliver, Staff Terms Offered: Winter
Prerequisite(s): These courses must be taken in sequence. SOSC 13100
SOSC 13300. Social Science Inquiry III. 100 Units.
Instructor(s): E. Oliver, Staff Terms Offered: Spring
Prerequisite(s): These courses must be taken in sequence. SOSC 13200
SOSC 14100-14200-14300. Mind I-II-III.
Students registered in this sequence must attend the first and second class sessions or their registration will be dropped. This sequence takes an empirical, scientific approach to understanding the functions of the mind. Drawing on psychology, anthropology, sociology, economics, and a number of other social as well as biological sciences, the course examines how the mind operates at multiple levels of analysis (e.g., biological, psychological, societal) and across a variety of time scales (e.g., exploring processes that unfold over the course of milliseconds as well as those that unfold over millennia). We examine issues such as how people apprehend reality, the development of thought across the life span, the impact of social contextual factors on mental processes, the ideal of rationality and systematic deviations from that ideal, how different languages and cultures represent different ways of seeing and thinking about the world. Cross-cutting these specific topic areas is a sustained exploration of the process by which contemporary social science is conducted. For example, we consider what constitutes a legitimate social scientific question, what counts as valid empirical evidence, and how data are used to test theories and to support causal claims.
SOSC 14100. Mind I. 100 Units.
Instructor(s): J. Correll, Staff Terms Offered: Autumn
Prerequisite(s): These courses must be taken in sequence
SOSC 14200. Mind II. 100 Units.
Instructor(s): J. Correll, Staff Terms Offered: Winter
Prerequisite(s): These courses must be taken in sequence. SOSC 14100
SOSC 14300. Mind III. 100 Units.
Instructor(s): J.Correll, Staff Terms Offered: Spring
Prerequisite(s): These courses must be taken in sequence. SOSC 14200
SOSC 15100-15200-15300. Classics of Social and Political Thought I-II-III.
Students registered in this sequence must attend the first and second class sessions or their registration will be dropped. What is justice? What makes a good society? This sequence examines such problems as the conflicts between individual interest and common good; between morality, religion, and politics; and between liberty and equality. We read classic writings from Plato, Aristotle, and Aquinas to such great founders and critics of modernity as Machiavelli, Hobbes, Locke, Rousseau, Constant, Tocqueville, Mill, Marx, Nietzsche, and Weber. Writing before our departmentalization of disciplines, they were at the same time sociologists, psychologists, political scientists, economists, and moralists; they offer contrasting alternative conceptions of society and politics that underlie continuing controversies in the social sciences and in contemporary political life.
SOSC 15100. Classics of Social and Political Thought I. 100 Units.
Instructor(s): N. Tarcov, Staff Terms Offered: Autumn
Prerequisite(s): These courses must be taken in sequence
SOSC 15200. Classics of Social and Political Thought II. 100 Units.
Instructor(s): J. Pitts, Staff Terms Offered: Winter
Prerequisite(s): These courses must be taken in sequence. SOSC 15100
SOSC 15300. Classics of Social and Political Thought III. 100 Units.
Instructor(s): R. Gooding-Williams, Staff Terms Offered: Spring
Prerequisite(s): These courses must be taken in sequence. SOSC 15200
SOSC 02980. Practicum. 025 Units.
This course is for students who secure a summer internship. For details, visit frogs.uchicago.edu/internships/course_credit.cfm. Students write a short paper (two to three pages) and give an oral presentation reflecting on their internship experience.
Instructor(s): D. Spatz Terms Offered: Summer
Note(s): Must be taken for P/F grading; students who fail to complete the course requirements will receive an F on their transcript (no W will be granted). Students receive .25 course credits at completion of course. Course meets once in Spring Quarter and once in Autumn Quarter. Course fee $150; students in need of financial aid should contact Susan Art at 702.8609.
Equivalent Course(s): HUMA 02980
SOSC 20200. Survey Research Overview. 100 Units.
The course provides an overview of interview-based data collection methods. Each student must develop a research question to guide their research design. Students get an overview of different interview-based data collection methods (focus groups, key-informant interviews, large-N sample surveys), how to sample and design a questionnaire or interview guide for their project, and the nuts and bolts of actual recruitment, receipt control and survey administration. The instructor provides feedback for proposed elements of each student's research plan through weekly assignments. The final paper is a research proposal that outlines a plan for research to address the student's research question.
Instructor(s): M. Van Haitsma Terms Offered: Autumn, Winter
Equivalent Course(s): SOCI 20118,MAPS 30900,SOCI 30118,SOSC 30900,SSAD 53200
SOSC 20800-20900-21000. Rome: Antiquity to Baroque I-II-III.
(Rome, Italy)
SOSC 20800. Rome: Antiquity to Baroque I. 100 Units.
Terms Offered: Autumn
Prerequisite(s): These courses must be taken in sequence
SOSC 20900. Rome: Antiquity to Baroque II. 100 Units.
Terms Offered: Autumn
Prerequisite(s): These courses must be taken in sequence
SOSC 21000. Rome: Antiquity to Baroque III. 100 Units.
Terms Offered: Autumn
Prerequisite(s): These courses must be taken in sequence
SOSC 21100-21200. Music in Western Civilization I-II.
Prior music course or ability to read music not required. Students must confirm enrollment by attending one of the first two sessions of class. This two-quarter sequence meets the general education requirement in civilization studies; it does not meet the general education requirement in the dramatic, musical, and visual arts. This two-quarter sequence explores musical works of broad cultural significance in Western civilization. We study pieces not only from the standpoint of musical style but also through the lenses of politics, intellectual history, economics, gender, cultural studies, and so on. Readings are taken both from our music textbook and from the writings of a number of figures such as St. Benedict of Nursia and Martin Luther. In addition to lectures, students discuss important issues in the readings and participate in music listening exercises in smaller sections.
SOSC 21100. Music in Western Civilization I: To 1750. 100 Units.
Instructor(s): A. Robertson Terms Offered: Winter
Equivalent Course(s): MUSI 12100,HIST 12700
SOSC 21200. Music in Western Civilization II: 1750 to the Present. 100 Units.
Terms Offered: Spring
Equivalent Course(s): MUSI 12200,HIST 12800
SOSC 21300-21400-21500. Western Mediterranean Civilization I-II-III.
(Barcelona, Spain)
SOSC 21300. Western Mediterranean Civilization I. 100 Units.
Terms Offered: Winter
Prerequisite(s): These courses must be taken in sequence
SOSC 21400. Western Mediterranean Civilization II. 100 Units.
Terms Offered: Winter
Prerequisite(s): These courses must be taken in sequence
SOSC 21500. Western Mediterranean Civilization III. 100 Units.
Terms Offered: Winter
Prerequisite(s): These courses must be taken in sequence
SOSC 21700-21800-21900. Introduction to Linguistics I-II-III.
These courses typically are taken in sequence. This course is an introductory survey of methods, findings, and problems in areas of major interest within linguistics and of the relationship of linguistics to other disciplines. Topics include the biological basis of language, basic notions of syntax, semantics, pragmatics, basic syntactic typology of language, phonetics, phonology, morphology, language acquisition, linguistic variation, and linguistic change.
SOSC 21700. Introduction to Linguistics I. 100 Units.
Terms Offered: Autumn
Prerequisite(s): These courses must be taken in sequence
Equivalent Course(s): ANTH 27001,ANTH 37001,LING 20100,LING 30100
SOSC 21800. Introduction to Linguistics II. 100 Units.
Terms Offered: Winter
Prerequisite(s): These courses must be taken in sequence
Equivalent Course(s): ANTH 27002,ANTH 37002,LING 20200,LING 30200
SOSC 21900. Introduction to Linguistics III. 100 Units.
Terms Offered: Spring
Prerequisite(s): These courses must be taken in sequence
Equivalent Course(s): ANTH 27003,ANTH 37003,LING 20300,LING 30300
SOSC 22000-22100-22200. Islamic Thought and Literature I-II-III.
This sequence meets the general education requirement in civilization studies. Taking these courses in sequence is recommended but not required.
SOSC 22000. Islamic Thought and Literature I. 100 Units.
This course covers the period from ca. 600 to 950, concentrating on the career of the Prophet Muhammad; Qur'an and Hadith; the Caliphate; the development of Islamic legal, theological, philosophical, and mystical discourses; sectarian movements; and Arabic literature.
Instructor(s): T. Qutbuddin Terms Offered: Autumn
Equivalent Course(s): NEHC 20601,RLST 20401
SOSC 22100. Islamic Thought and Literature II. 100 Units.
This course covers the period from ca. 950 to 1700. We survey such works as literature, theology, philosophy, sufism, politics, and history that were written in Arabic, Persian, and Turkish. We also consider the art, architecture, and music of the Islamicate traditions. Through primary texts, secondary sources, and lectures, we trace the cultural, social, religious, political, and institutional evolution through the period of the Fatimids, the Crusades, the Mongol invasions, and the "gunpowder empires" (Ottomans, Safavids, Mughals).
Instructor(s): F. Lewis Terms Offered: Winter
Note(s): Taking these courses in sequence is recommended but not required. This sequence meets the general education requirement in civilization studies.
Equivalent Course(s): NEHC 20602,RLST 20402
SOSC 22200. Islamic Thought and Literature III. 100 Units.
This course covers the period from ca. 1700 to the present, exploring works of Arab intellectuals who interpreted various aspects of Islamic philosophy, political theory, and law in the modern age. We look at diverse interpretations concerning the role of religion in a modern society, at secularized and historicized approaches to religion, and at the critique of both religious establishments and nation-states as articulated by Arab intellectuals. Generally, we discuss secondary literature first and the primary sources later.
Instructor(s): A. El Shamsy Terms Offered: Spring
Equivalent Course(s): NEHC 20603,RLST 20403
SOSC 22551-22552-22553. African Civilizations: Colonialism, Migration, Diaspora I-II-III.
(Paris, France) This sequence meets the general education requirement for civilization studies.
SOSC 22551. African Civilizations: Colonialism, Migration, Diaspora I. 100 Units.
Terms Offered: Autumn
Prerequisite(s): These courses must be taken in sequence.
SOSC 22552. African Civilizations: Colonialism, Migration, Diaspora II. 100 Units.
Terms Offered: Autumn
Prerequisite(s): These courses must be taken in sequence
SOSC 22553. African Civilizations: Colonialism, Migration, Diaspora III. 100 Units.
Terms Offered: Autumn
Prerequisite(s): These courses must be taken in sequence
SOSC 23000-23100. Introduction to the Civilizations of South Asia I-II.
This sequence introduces core themes in the formation of culture and society in South Asia from the early modern period until the present. This sequence meets the general education requirement in civilization studies. These courses must be taken in sequence.
SOSC 23000. Introduction to the Civilizations of South Asia I. 100 Units.
The Autumn Quarter focuses on Islam in South Asia, Hindu-Muslim interaction, Mughal political and literary traditions, and South Asia’s early encounters with Europe.
Instructor(s): M. Alam Terms Offered: Autumn 2012
Equivalent Course(s): SALC 20100,ANTH 24101,HIST 10800,SASC 20000
SOSC 23100. Introduction to the Civilizations of South Asia II. 100 Units.
The Winter Quarter analyzes the colonial period (i.e., reform movements, the rise of nationalism, communalism, caste, and other identity movements) up to the independence and partition of India.
Instructor(s): R. Majumdar Terms Offered: Winter 2013
Equivalent Course(s): SALC 20200,ANTH 24102,HIST 10900,SASC 20100
SOSC 23004-23005-23006. South Asian Civilizations in India I-II-III.
(Pune, India)
SOSC 23004. South Asian Civilizations in India I. 100 Units.
Terms Offered: Autumn
Prerequisite(s): These courses must be taken in sequence
SOSC 23005. South Asian Civilizations in India II. 100 Units.
Terms Offered: Autumn
Prerequisite(s): These courses must be taken in sequence
SOSC 23006. South Asian Civilizations in India III. 100 Units.
Terms Offered: Autumn
Prerequisite(s): These courses must be taken in sequence
SOSC 23500. Introduction to the Civilizations of East Asia I. 100 Units.
Instructor(s): G. Alitto Terms Offered: Autumn
Equivalent Course(s): HIST 15100,CRES 10800,EALC 10800
SOSC 23600. Introduction to the Civilizations of East Asia II. 100 Units.
Terms Offered: Winter
Equivalent Course(s): CRES 10900,EALC 10900,HIST 15200
SOSC 23700. Introduction to the Civilizations of East Asia III. 100 Units.
Terms Offered: Not offered 2012/2013
Equivalent Course(s): CRES 11000,EALC 11000,HIST 15300
SOSC 23801. Introduction to the Civilizations of East Asia IV. 100 Units.
Instructor(s): M. Bradley Terms Offered: Spring
Equivalent Course(s): EALC 15400,HIST 15400
SOSC 23701-23702-23703. China in East Asian Civilization I-II-III.
(Beijing, China)
SOSC 23701. China in East Asian Civilization I. 100 Units.
Terms Offered: Autumn
Prerequisite(s): These courses must be taken in sequence
SOSC 23702. China in East Asian Civilization II. 100 Units.
Terms Offered: Autumn
Prerequisite(s): These courses must be taken in sequence
SOSC 23703. China in East Asian Civilization III. 100 Units.
Terms Offered: Autumn
Prerequisite(s): These courses must be taken in sequence
SOSC 24000-24100. Introduction to Russian Civilization I-II.
This two-quarter sequence provides an interdisciplinary introduction to Russian civilization. The first quarter covers the ninth century to the 1880s; the second quarter continues on through the post-Soviet period. Working closely with a variety of primary sources—from oral legends to film and music, from political treatises to literary masterpieces—we will track the evolution of Russian civilization over the centuries and through radically different political regimes. Topics to be discussed include: the influence of Byzantine, Mongol-Tataric, and Western culture in Russian civilization; forces of change and continuity in political, intellectual and cultural life; the relationship between center and periphery; systems of social and political legitimization; and symbols and practices of collective identity. This sequence meets the general education requirement in civilization studies. Taking these courses in sequence is recommended but not required. This sequence is offered in alternate years.
SOSC 24000. Introduction to Russian Civilization I. 100 Units.
Instructor(s): F. Hillis Terms Offered: Autumn. Not offered in 2012-13.
Equivalent Course(s): HIST 13900,RUSS 25100
SOSC 24100. Introduction to Russian Civilization II. 100 Units.
Instructor(s): F. Hillis Terms Offered: Winter. Not offered 2012-13.
Equivalent Course(s): HIST 14000,RUSS 25200
SOSC 24001-24002-24003. Colonizations I-II-III.
This sequence meets the general education requirement in civilization studies. This three-quarter sequence approaches the concept of civilization from an emphasis on cross-cultural/societal connection and exchange. We explore the dynamics of conquest, slavery, colonialism, and their reciprocal relationships with concepts such as resistance, freedom, and independence, with an eye toward understanding their interlocking role in the making of the modern world.
SOSC 24001. Colonizations I. 100 Units.
Themes of slavery, colonization, and the making of the Atlantic world are covered in the first quarter.
Terms Offered: Autumn
Prerequisite(s): These courses can be taken in any sequence.
Note(s): This sequence meets the general education requirement in civilization studies. This course is offered every year.
Equivalent Course(s): CRES 24001,ANTH 24001,HIST 18301
SOSC 24002. Colonizations II. 100 Units.
Modern European and Japanese colonialism in Asia and the Pacific is the theme of the second quarter.
Terms Offered: Winter
Prerequisite(s): These courses can be taken in any sequence.
Equivalent Course(s): CRES 24002,ANTH 24002,HIST 18302
SOSC 24003. Colonizations III. 100 Units.
The third quarter considers the processes and consequences of decolonization both in the newly independent nations and the former colonial powers.
Terms Offered: Spring
Prerequisite(s): These courses can be taken in any sequence.
Equivalent Course(s): CRES 24003,ANTH 24003,HIST 18303,SALC 20702
SOSC 24302-24402-24502. Latin American Civilization in Oaxaca I-II-III.
(Oaxaca, Mexico)
SOSC 24302. Latin American Civilization in Oaxaca I. 100 Units.
Terms Offered: Winter
Prerequisite(s): These courses must be taken in sequence
SOSC 24402. Latin American Civilization in Oaxaca II. 100 Units.
Terms Offered: Winter
Prerequisite(s): These courses must be taken in sequence
SOSC 24502. Latin American Civilization in Oaxaca III. 100 Units.
Terms Offered: Winter
Prerequisite(s): These courses must be taken in sequence
SOSC 24600-24700-24800. Vienna in Western Civilization I-II-III.
(Vienna, Austria)
SOSC 24600. Vienna in Western Civilization I. 100 Units.
Terms Offered: Autumn
Prerequisite(s): These courses must be taken in sequence
SOSC 24700. Vienna in Western Civilization II. 100 Units.
Terms Offered: Autumn
Prerequisite(s): These courses must be taken in sequence
SOSC 24800. Vienna in Western Civilization III. 100 Units.
Terms Offered: Autumn
Prerequisite(s): These courses must be taken in sequence
SOSC 25100. Urban Structure and Process. 100 Units.
This course reviews competing theories of urban development, especially their ability to explain the changing nature of cities under the impact of advanced industrialism. Analysis includes a consideration of emerging metropolitan regions, the microstructure of local neighborhoods, and the limitations of the past U.S. experience as a way of developing worldwide urban policy.
Instructor(s): O. McRoberts Terms Offered: Spring
Equivalent Course(s): SOCI 20104,CRES 20104,GEOG 22700,GEOG 32700,SOCI 30104
SOSC 26100-26200-26300. Introduction to Latin American Civilization I-II-III.
Taking these courses in sequence is not required. This sequence meets the general education requirement in civilization studies. This sequence is offered every year. This course introduces the history and cultures of Latin America (e.g., Mexico, Central and South America, and the Caribbean Islands).
SOSC 26100. Introduction to Latin American Civilization I. 100 Units.
Autumn Quarter examines the origins of civilizations in Latin America with a focus on the political, social, and cultural features of the major pre-Columbian civilizations of the Maya, Inca, and Aztec. The quarter concludes with an analysis of the Spanish and Portuguese conquest, and the construction of colonial societies in Latin America.
Terms Offered: Autumn
Equivalent Course(s): LACS 16100,ANTH 23101,CRES 16101,HIST 16101,HIST 36101,LACS 34600
SOSC 26200. Introduction to Latin American Civilization II. 100 Units.
Winter Quarter addresses the evolution of colonial societies, the wars of independence, and the emergence of Latin American nation-states in the changing international context of the nineteenth century.
Terms Offered: Winter
Equivalent Course(s): LACS 16200,ANTH 23102,CRES 16102,HIST 16102,HIST 36102,LACS 34700
SOSC 26300. Introduction to Latin American Civilization III. 100 Units.
Spring Quarter focuses on the twentieth century, with special emphasis on the challenges of economic, political, and social development in the region.
Terms Offered: Spring
Equivalent Course(s): LACS 16300,ANTH 23103,CRES 16103,HIST 16103,HIST 36103,LACS 34800
SOSC 26900. The Complex Problem of World Hunger. 100 Units.
Few of our policymakers are experts in economics, agronomy, food science, and molecular biology, yet all of these disciplines are essential for developing strategies to end world hunger. Choosing one country as a test case, we look at the history, politics, governmental structure, population demographics, and agricultural challenges. We then study the theory of world markets, global trade, and microeconomics of developing nations, as well as the promise and limitation of traditional breeding and biotechnology.
Instructor(s): J. Malamy Terms Offered: Spring
Prerequisite(s): Third- or fourth-year standing
Note(s): This course does not meet requirements for the biological sciences major.
Equivalent Course(s): BPRO 24800,ENST 24800,BIOS 02810
SOSC 27500-27600-27700. European Civilization in Paris I-II-III.
Enrollment in Paris study abroad program. This sequence meets the general education requirement in civilization studies. This class meets in Paris.
SOSC 27500. European Civilization in Paris I. 100 Units.
Terms Offered: Autumn
SOSC 27600. European Civilization in Paris II. 100 Units.
Terms Offered: Winter
SOSC 27700. European Civilization in Paris III. 100 Units.
Terms Offered: Spring
SOSC 27501-27601-27701. Civilisation Européenne I-II-III.
Enrollment in Paris study abroad program. This sequence meets the general education requirement in civilization studies. Cette série de cours est un hybride: à la fois une introduction à l’histoire de la civilisation européenne depuis le Moyen Age et une vue d’ensemble de l’histoire de France durant cette période. Notre objectif sera double: d’une part, intégrer étude de textes et découverte de Paris et de sa région; de l’autre, pratiquer le métier d’historiens de la culture. Pour ce faire, nous analyserons de nombreux documents historiques et oeuvres littéraires, philosophiques, artistiques, et musicales. Nous en discuterons lors de nos trois réunions hebdomadaires. De plus, nous étudierons la civilisation française à travers les villages, monastères, et châteaux de la région parisienne et ailleurs. Classes conducted in French. This class meets in Paris.
SOSC 27501. Civilisation Européenne I. 100 Units.
Terms Offered: Autumn
Prerequisite(s): Advanded knowledge of French
SOSC 27601. Civilisation Européenne II. 100 Units.
Terms Offered: Autumn
Prerequisite(s): Advanced Knowledge of French
SOSC 27701. Civilisation Européenne III. 100 Units.
Terms Offered: Autumn
Prerequisite(s): Advanced Knowledge of French
SOSC 27800-27900-28000. Greek Antiquity and Its Legacy I-II-III.
(Athens, Greece)
SOSC 27800. Greek Antiquity and Its Legacy I. 100 Units.
Terms Offered: Spring
Prerequisite(s): Advanced knowledge of French
SOSC 27900. Greek Antiquity and Its Legacy II. 100 Units.
Terms Offered: Spring
Prerequisite(s): Advanced knowledge of French
SOSC 28000. Greek Antiquity and Its Legacy III. 100 Units.
Terms Offered: Spring
Prerequisite(s): Advanced knowledge of French
SOSC 28200. Problems in the Study of Gender. 100 Units.
This course will explore interdisciplinary debates in the analysis of gender and feminism in a transnational perspective. Course readings will primarily traverse the twentieth century encompassing Africa, Europe, and the Americas. We will consider how understandings of gender intersect with categories of ethnicity, race, class, and sexuality. Topics to be covered include gendered experiences of: colonial encounters; migration and urbanization; transformations in marriage and family life; medicine, the body, and sexual health; and decolonization and nation-building, religion, and masculinity. Materials will include theoretical and empirical texts, fiction, memoirs, and films.
Instructor(s): L. Auslander Terms Offered: Autumn
Note(s): May be taken in sequence or individually.
Equivalent Course(s): GNSE 10100,CRES 10101,ENGL 10200,HIST 29306
SOSC 28300. Problems in the Study of Sexuality. 100 Units.
This course addresses the production of particularly gendered norms and practices. Using a variety of historical and theoretical materials and practices, it addresses how sexual difference operates in the contexts of nation, race, and class formation, for example, and/or work, the family, migration, imperialism and postcolonial relations.
Instructor(s): L. Berlant Terms Offered: Autumn
Note(s): May be taken in sequence or individually
Equivalent Course(s): GNSE 10200,ENGL 10300
SOSC 28851-28852-28853. Jerusalem in Middle Eastern Civilizations I-II-III.
(Jerusalem, Israel)
SOSC 28851. Jerusalem in Middle Eastern Civilizations I. 100 Units.
Terms Offered: Spring
Prerequisite(s): Advanced knowledge of French
SOSC 28852. Jerusalem in Middle Eastern Civilizations II. 100 Units.
Terms Offered: Spring
Prerequisite(s): Advanced knowledge of French
SOSC 28853. Jerusalem in Middle Eastern Civilizations III. 100 Units.
Terms Offered: Spring
Prerequisite(s): Advanced knowledge of French
SOSC 29500. Readings in Social Sciences in a Foreign Language. 100 Units.
Students are required to make arrangements with appropriate instructors and obtain consent of senior adviser. Students are required to submit the College Reading and Research Course Form.
Terms Offered: Autumn, Winter, Spring
Prerequisite(s): At least one year of language
SOSC 29700. Independent Study in the Social Sciences. 100 Units.
Terms Offered: Autumn, Winter, Spring
Prerequisite(s): Consent of instructor and senior adviser
Note(s): Students are required to submit the College Reading and Research Course Form.
SOSC 29900. BA Paper in Russian Civilization. 100 Units.
This is a reading and research course for independent study related to BA research and BA paper preparation.
Terms Offered: Autumn, Winter, Spring, Summer
Prerequisite(s): Consent of instructor and undergraduate program chair
Note(s): Students are required to submit the College Reading and Research Course Form.
SOSC 34500. Anthropology of Museums I. 100 Units.
Instructor(s): M. Fred Terms Offered: Winter
Prerequisite(s): Advanced standing and consent of instructor
Equivalent Course(s): ANTH 24511,ANTH 34502,CHDV 38101,CRES 34501,MAPS 34500
SOSC 34600. Anthropology of Museums II. 100 Units.
Instructor(s): M. Fred Terms Offered: Spring
Prerequisite(s): Advanced standing or consent of instructor
Equivalent Course(s): ANTH 24512,CRES 34502
SOSC 39000. Anthropology of Disability. 100 Units.
This seminar undertakes to explore "disability" from an anthropological perspective that recognizes it as a socially constructed concept with implications for our understanding of fundamental issues about culture, society, and individual differences. We explore a wide range of theoretical, legal, ethical, and policy issues as they relate to the experiences of persons with disabilities, their families, and advocates. The final project is a presentation on the fieldwork.
Instructor(s): M. Fred Terms Offered: Autumn
Prerequisite(s): Third- or fourth-year standing